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Rebecca A. Senft
Researcher at Harvard University
Publications - 11
Citations - 226
Rebecca A. Senft is an academic researcher from Harvard University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Dorsal raphe nucleus & Raphe. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 9 publications receiving 110 citations. Previous affiliations of Rebecca A. Senft include Howard Hughes Medical Institute & Duke University.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
A single-cell transcriptomic and anatomic atlas of mouse dorsal raphe Pet1 neurons.
Benjamin W. Okaty,Nikita Sturrock,Yasmin Escobedo Lozoya,YoonJeung Chang,Rebecca A. Senft,Krissy A. Lyon,Olga V. Alekseyenko,Susan M. Dymecki +7 more
TL;DR: It is shown that P2ry1-Pet1 DR neurons – the most molecularly distinct subtype – possess unique efferent projections and electrophysiological properties, and these data complement and extend previous DR characterizations.
Journal ArticleDOI
Best practices and tools for reporting reproducible fluorescence microscopy methods.
Paula Montero Llopis,Rebecca A. Senft,Tim J. Ross-Elliott,Ryan Stephansky,Daniel P. Keeley,Preman Koshar,Guillermo Marqués,Ya-Sheng Gao,Benjamin R. Carlson,Thomas Pengo,Mark A. Sanders,Lisa A. Cameron,Michelle S. Itano +12 more
TL;DR: The authors provide guidelines and resources to enable accurate reporting for the most common fluorescence light microscopy modalities with the goal of improving microscopy reporting, rigor and reproducibility.
Journal ArticleDOI
Risk-averse personalities have a systemically potentiated neuroendocrine stress axis: A multilevel experiment in Parus major
Alexander T. Baugh,Rebecca A. Senft,Marian Firke,Abigail Lauder,Julia Schroeder,Simone Meddle,Kees van Oers,Michaela Hau +7 more
TL;DR: The hypothesis that steroid hormones can exert pleiotropic effects that organize behavioral phenotypes is supported and novel evidence that neuroendocrine factors robustly explain a large fraction of endocrine and personality variation is provided.
Peer ReviewDOI
Author response: A single-cell transcriptomic and anatomic atlas of mouse dorsal raphe Pet1 neurons
Benjamin W. Okaty,Nikita Sturrock,Yasmin Escobedo Lozoya,YoonJeung Chang,Rebecca A. Senft,Krissy A. Lyon,Olga V. Alekseyenko,Susan M. Dymecki +7 more
Journal ArticleDOI
Distribution and Abundance of Glucocorticoid and Mineralocorticoid Receptors throughout the Brain of the Great Tit (Parus major)
TL;DR: Understanding intra- and interspecific patterns of glucocorticoid receptor expression can inform us about the behavioral processes that may be sensitive to stress and stimulate future hypotheses concerning the relationships between receptor expression, circulating hormone concentrations and performance traits under selection.